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Short-term resource allocation during extensive athletic competition

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Longman, DP 
Prall, SP 
Shattuck, EC 
Stephen, ID 
Stock, JT 

Abstract

Abstract Objectives: Following predictions from life history theory, we sought to identify acute trade-offs between reproductive effort (as measured by psychological arousal) and somatic maintenance (via functional measures of innate immunity) during conditions of severe energetic imbalance. Methods: Sixty-six male ultramarathon runners (ages 20 to 37 years) were sampled before and after a lengthy race. Saliva and sera were collected for testosterone and immunological analyses (hemolytic complement activity and bacterial killing ability). Lean body mass was assessed by bioelectrical impedance, and libido was measured using a slideshow of arousing and neutral images. Results: Following predictions, there was a significant decrease in salivary testosterone levels (109.59 pg/mL versus 97.61 pg/mL, P<.001) and arousal scores in response to provocative images (5.40 versus 4.89, P5.001) between prerace and postrace time points. Additionally, participant bacterial killing ability (P5.035) and hemolytic complement activity (P5.021) increased between prerace and postrace. Conclusions: Decreased libido and testosterone with concomitant heightened innate immune responses suggest a shift in energetic priorities away from reproduction and toward maintenance/defense during a period of energetic stress.

Description

Keywords

life history theory, testosterone, libido, innate immunity

Journal Title

American Journal of Human Biology

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1042-0533
1520-6300

Volume Title

Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell
Sponsorship
European Research Council (617627)